According to Elizabeth Wong, head of Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC), “We’ve had four years of experience in regulating this industry … We think that this may be actually a good time to really think carefully about whether we will continue with this professional investor-only requirement.”
Hong Kong's SFC aims to introduce a bill that will allow crypto platforms to directly offer their services to retail investors. Wong claimed that the SFC will seek public opinion for passing this bill later this year.
A city and special administrative region of China, Hong Kong is willing to distinguish its crypto regulation approach from the blanket crypto ban in mainland China.#CryptoNews #Bitcoin
— Avacrypto (@avacryptoo) October 22, 2022
Interestingly, unlike mainland China, trading crypto assets is not illegal in Hong Kong.
Earlier, investing in cryptocurrencies for Hong Kong-based clients was limited to trading on centralized exchanges. Moreover, only corporate investors, whose portfolios consisted of at least $1M, were allowed to invest in crypto.
Now, the SFC is considering removing this requirement and permitting all “retail investors” to trade crypto.
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It is worth noting that Hong Kong regulators have taken some crypto-friendly measures in recent times. In January, the SFC introduced a policy to allow investors to purchase digital asset-based derivative products.
The SFC is also expected to release a regulatory framework for crypto tokens and NFTs during the upcoming Fintech Week scheduled from October 31 to November 4.
For more insights, explore our cryptocurrency market to make informed decisions.



